Anonymous ID: 3510dd Aug. 9, 2022, 4:48 a.m. No.17319229   🗄️.is 🔗kun

101-year-old Nazi guard charged over the murder of 3,518 prisoners at WW2 camp where 'cruellest methods of extermination were invented' insists he 'did absolutely nothing'

 

Josef Schuetz, 101, was a guard at Sachsenhausen extermination camp in WW2

He is oldest person to face trial for Nazi crimes committed during the Holocaust

The camp in Oranienburg, north of Berlin, was said to be an 'experimental camp'

Schuetz said, 'I don't know why I am here,' and said he wasn't aware of crimes

He didn't 'want to remember' said Holocaust survivor Antoine Grumbach, 80

 

A Nazi concentration camp guard, aged 101, charged with murdering thousands of prisoners during the Second World War insisted he did 'absolutely nothing' at his trial today.

 

Josef Schuetz is the oldest person so far to face trial over Nazi war crimes committed during the Holocaust.

 

At his trial in Germany today, June 27, he again denied being complicit in war crimes during the Holocaust as his trial drew to a close.

 

Schuetz is accused of involvement in the murders of 3,518 prisoners at the Sachsenhausen camp in Oranienburg, north of Berlin, between 1942 and 1945.

 

Sachsenhausen was said to be an 'experimental extermination camp' where the 'cruellest methods' were invented.

 

The pensioner, who now lives in Brandenburg state, has pleaded innocent throughout the trial.

 

He insisted to the court that he did 'absolutely nothing' and was not aware of the gruesome crimes being carried out at the camp.

 

'I don't know why I am here,' he said again at the close of the proceedings, his voice wavering.

 

Dressed in a grey shirt and pyjama bottoms and sitting in a wheelchair, Schuetz insisted he had had nothing to do with the atrocities and said he was was 'telling the truth'.

 

Antoine Grumbach, 80, whose father died in Sachsenhausen, said that Schuetz 'does not want to remember', calling it 'a form of defence'.

 

The trial was not just about 'putting a centenarian in prison', he said. It had also produced evidence that Sachsenhausen was an 'experimental extermination camp'.

 

'All the cruellest methods were invented there and then exported,' Grumbach said.

 

Prosecutors say he 'knowingly and willingly' participated in the crimes as a guard at the camp and are seeking to punish him with five years behind bars.

 

But Schuetz's lawyer, Stefan Waterkamp, said that since there were no photographs of him wearing an SS uniform, the case was based on 'hints' of his possible involvement.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10958259/Nazi-guard-101-charged-murder-3-518-WW2-camp-insists-did-absolutely-nothing.html